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WSWS : News
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America : Canada
Canada's "mini-budget" lets rich appropriate still
greater share of social wealth
By Keith Jones
27 October 2000
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this version to print
Big business, the corporate media, and the political right
have lavished effusive praise on the Liberals' October 18 federal
mini-budget. Even Ontario Premier Mike Harriswho
has repeatedly chastised the Liberals for not financing steep
tax cuts through further cuts to public servicesenthused,
the federal government is talking my kind of language.
Little wonder. Heavily skewed in favor of those with the highest
incomes, the federal tax cuts will enable the owners of capital
and the managerial and professional elite to appropriate a still
larger share of social wealth. Moreover, with the Liberals having
allotted $100 billion to their five-year tax reduction plan and
$22 billion toward paying down the national debt in this and the
previous fiscal year, little remains of the projected federal
budgetary surpluses. Certainly, not the financial means to increase
federal spending to repair the damage done to public and social
services by a decade of draconian cuts. And come the next economic
slump, the fiscal and political pressures for a new volley of
public spending cuts will be nigh irresistible.
A study of the personal income tax cuts that the Liberals made
in last February's budget found 19 percent of the total monetary
benefit will accrue to the 2 percent of taxpayers with annual
incomes above $100,000. The 39 percent of taxpayers with incomes
between $25,000 and $50,000 will, by contrast, reap just 27 percent
of the tax savings.
The cuts announced in the October 18 mini-budget are even more
weighted in favor of the most privileged. Effective January 1,
the Liberals are slashing the taxation rate on the lowest bracket
(the first $30,700 in income) by 1 percent to 16 percent and on
the second bracket (from $30,700 to $61,500) by 2 percentage points
to 24 percent. The tax rate on income between $61,500 and $99,999
is being cut by three points, or three times the cut in the lowest
bracket, to 26 percent.
The most affluent will continue to pay a tax of 29 percent
on that part of their employment income that exceeds $100,000.
But the Liberals have abolished a 5 percent surtax on income over
$85,000, and the rich and super-rich will reap the lion's share
of the increase in the capital gains tax exemption. In February,
the Liberals increased that exemption from 25 to 33.3 percent.
Then last week, and effective immediately, they raised it to 50
percent, which is 10 percentage points higher than even the Canadian
Chamber of Commerce was seeking. In 1996, 55 percent of the value
of all capital gains exemptions went to the 1 percent of taxpayers
with incomes of at least $150,000, including a whopping 41 percent
to the 0.4 percent of taxpayers making more than $250,000 a year.
The increase in the capital gains exemption means those making
in excess of $100,000 will be subject to an effective tax rate
of just 14.5 percent on income derived from the sale of their
stock, real estate and other investments. Prior to last February's
budget the effective rate was slightly above 25 percent.
The Liberals' February budget was crafted to enable the government
to maintain the pretense that the dividend from years
of fiscal austerity is being distributed equitably. The increase
in the capital gains exemption and the elimination of the surtax
on income between $55,000 and 85,000 were supposedly balanced
by increases in the Goods and Services Tax Credit paid to those
with low incomes and an enriching and widening of the Child Tax
Credit. (Both these refundable credits actually arise from reactionary
changes to government policy over the past decade. The GST is
a regressive, sales tax; the Child Tax Credit, which replaced
universal family allowances, discriminates against those on welfare.)
The mini-budget, by contrast, provides low-income families only
a pittance in additional creditsan $8.33 per month, per
child increase in the Child Tax Credit and a this year-only payment
of up to $250 to offset increases in the cost of home heating
due to the oil price surge.
In tabling his mini-budget, Finance Minister Paul Martin savaged
the Alliance proposal to scrap a progressive tax system in favor
of a 17 percent flat tax. But the Liberals' tax cuts do much to
flatten the tax system, thus lessening its compensatory
effect on the income inequities produced by the capitalist market.
And this at a time when social equality is growing by leaps and
bounds. (A recent Canadian Center for Policy Alternatives study
found that between 1993 and 1998, the average after-tax income
of the richest quintile of taxpayers rose 13.1 percent or more
than $11,000, while that of the poorest fifth of all Canadians
rose only 1.4 percent or about $250.)
The Liberals are also cutting the general corporate tax rate
by 1 percentage point next January 1 and by 2 further points in
each of the following three years. In February, the Liberals had
promised to lower the corporate tax rate from 28 percent to 21
percent over five years, but to the chagrin of big business they
did not lay out a timetable for the reductions, apart from announcing
next January's 1 percent cut. When these cuts are fully implemented,
the combined federal-provincial corporate tax rate will be about
35 percent, which is lower than in most US states. But Canadian
business leaders are already urging still steeper cuts, arguing
that Washington and many US states are readying to enact further
corporate tax cuts.
A major change in class relations
Taken together, the Liberals' February budget and this month's
mini-budget constitute a shift in federal government
policy as significant as that effected by the Liberals in 1995
and will have no less of an impact on class relations.
In 1995, little more than a year after winning office on a
pledge to make job creation the pivot of government policy, the
Liberals launched far and away the greatest program of public
spending cuts in Canadian history. The transfer payments that
Ottawa makes to the provinces to help fund health care, post-secondary
education and social programs were cut by one-third. Changes were
made to unemployment insurance that effectively deny benefits
to the majority of the jobless. Annual federal program spending
(that is, all government spending other than transfers to the
provinces and payments on the national debt) was slashed by 13.9
percent or $13.4 billion between 1993 and 1997.
In the last year of the Mulroney Tory government, total federal
government expenditure (apart from debt payments) was more than
$120 billion. In fiscal 1997, it was $108.8 billion. Meantime,
the federal spending to GNP ratio had shrunk to the lowest level
since the early 1950s, that is to the level of a period before
the establishment of the main Welfare State programs.
The Liberals and the political and corporate elites argued
that it was the urgency of eliminating the annual federal budget
deficit that made such sweeping spending cuts necessary. But now
that the budget has been balanced and the Treasury is amassing
huge surpluses, big business and its political representatives
oppose any major reinvestment of resources into public and social
services.
The purpose of the current crusade to cut taxes, like the deficit
war before it, is to radically redesign social policy so as to
enable capital and its managerial elite to appropriate a greater
share of social wealth. Not only do reductions in public and social
services expenditure result in tax cuts that swell the incomes
of corporations, the rich and the super-rich. They render working
people more dependent than ever on the capitalist market for their
livelihood, and thus serve to depress wages and working conditions.
A slew of studies, including by the government's own Statistics
Canada, have shown that Canadian society would be as socially
polarized as that of the US were it not for the redistribution
of income through the tax system and social benefits. The tax
cuts the Liberals have implemented over the past year will sharply
curtail the progressive or leveling character of the
tax system, while ensuring that the federal state lacks the financial
means to sustain the social welfare programs of the past.
See Also:
Canadian election campaign kicks off:
Liberals offer tax cuts to the rich and populist demagogy to working
people
[27 October 2000]
Canada's
Liberal government embraces the tax-cutting agenda of big business
[4 March 2000]
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